University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands.
University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Aggress Behav. 2019 May;45(3):275-286. doi: 10.1002/ab.21817. Epub 2019 Jan 24.
This study investigated if and how children and teachers differ in their assessment of victim-aggressor relationships in kindergartens. Self-, peer, and teacher reports of victimization-aggression networks (who is victimized by whom) were investigated in 25 Swiss kindergartens with 402 5- to 7-years-old. It was examined whether child characteristics (sex and parent-reported internalizing and externalizing behavior) influence informant reports of victimization and/or aggression. Findings from statistical network models indicated higher concordance between self and peer reports than between one of these and teacher reports. Results further showed more agreement among informants on aggressors than on victims. Aggressors reported by self and peer reports were low on internalizing behavior, and aggressors reported by self and teacher reports were high on externalizing behavior; teacher-reported victims were also high on externalizing behavior. Internalizing behavior was unrelated to victimization. According to self and peer reports, boys as well as girls were victimized by boys and girls equally; teachers reported less cross-sex victimization than same-sex victimization. The different views of teachers and children on victim-aggressor relationships have implications for the identification of aggression in early childhood. Mutual sharing of information between children, their parents, peers, and teachers may contribute to signaling victims and aggressors in the early school years.
本研究调查了儿童和教师在幼儿园中对受害者-攻击者关系的评估是否存在差异以及差异的程度。在 25 所瑞士幼儿园中,对 402 名 5 至 7 岁的儿童进行了自我报告、同伴报告和教师报告的受害-攻击网络(谁被谁受害)调查。研究考察了儿童特征(性别和父母报告的内化和外化行为)是否会影响受害和/或攻击的报告。统计网络模型的结果表明,自我报告和同伴报告之间的一致性高于其中任何一种与教师报告之间的一致性。结果还表明,在攻击者方面,报告者之间的一致性高于受害者。自我和同伴报告的攻击者的内化行为较低,自我和教师报告的攻击者的外化行为较高;教师报告的受害者的外化行为也较高。内化行为与受害无关。根据自我和同伴报告,男孩和女孩同样受到男孩和女孩的攻击;教师报告的跨性别受害比同性别受害少。教师和儿童对受害者-攻击者关系的不同看法对识别幼儿时期的攻击行为具有启示意义。儿童、其父母、同伴和教师之间相互分享信息,可能有助于在幼儿期识别受害者和攻击者。